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Zuma’s friends want to pay Nkandla bill

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The Friends of Jacob Zuma Trust will help the president repay what he owes for his Nkandla upgrades if he approaches them, its founder has said.

“As an organisation we are virtually non-existent because we did what we had to do back then. But if he needs us individually, we will always support him, like we always did in the past,” businessman Don Mkhwanazi said.

He said Zuma had not approached the organisation for financial help, but would also not comment when asked if he would personally help Zuma out.

Recently, Zuma asked the Constitutional Court for an order that Auditor General Thembekile Kimi Makwetu and Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan determine how much he should repay for those upgrades to his private Nkandla homestead not related to security, namely the visitors’ centre, amphitheatre, cattle kraal, chicken run and swimming pool.

Mkhwanazi said Zuma’s decision should be applauded as he had done it in the country’s long-term interest.

“I believe he wants to put this matter to rest so that we can focus on more important things and so that people can stop sniping at him.”

The trust, comprising the country’s leading businessmen, helped pay Zuma’s legal bills during his fight against his corruption charges.

Zuma’s long-time friend and ally, Durban businessman Vivian Reddy, also said Zuma had not approached him for any financial help.

In 2012, Reddy that he had lent Zuma money to pay for the first phase of Nkandla and that he had repaid it, and added that Zuma took out a bond for the home.

Greytown businessman Philani Mavundla, who previously publicly said he would settle Zuma’s Nkandla bill, did not want to comment. But the construction tycoon said that Zuma’s backers had discussed his debt.

Neither Zuma’s son, Edward, nor nephew, Khulubuse, were immediately available for comment.

Trying to find out whether Zuma will be able to pay it out of his own pocket is more difficult than it seems.

As president, he is entitled to a level of privacy regarding any assets and interests he may want to dip into to settle the account.

To get a list of what he owns requires an application to the secretary of Cabinet, director general in the Presidency Cassius Lubisi.

In 2010 Zuma was forced to apologise for delays over submitting his register of interests and at the time his lawyer, Michael Hulley, said it was the size of his family that made it complicated, as well as anomalies in the Executive Ethics Code.

Although he is private about his family, it is known that Zuma has four wives and is believed to have 20 children.

He has stated that he has a bond on his home at Nkandla, KwaZulu-Natal, where he was born and brought up, but it is not known if it is paid off.

The son of a policeman and domestic worker, Zuma was not born with a silver spoon in his mouth.

And the trial in which he was acquitted of rape would have set him back millions were it not for the fund-raising efforts of the Friends of Jacob Zuma Trust.

When he became president in 2009 Zuma, whose salary is R2.7 million a year, became entitled to the use of an official house in Durban, Cape Town and Pretoria, with most costs paid for by the state.

 

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